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Canada is a country that doesn’t quite occupy our collective psyche here in India, at least not as much as USA or China or UK. Yet, it is a country of many awesome things, one of them being Dinosaur Comics. Komikaze #10 (wow, two digit post number, finally.) is all about Dinosaur Comics, created by Ryan North. In a sense, this is the first post where we’d gingerly like to push the envelope a bit in terms of what we feature here. The comics we’ve featured so far have all been great in their own right, and I’m especially in awe of some of their creators who churn out a comic every single day without compromising on quality. This comic is different, in that it is unconventional and pushes the boundaries for a web comic.

The visuals are the same every single day, the content that varies is the dialogue between the characters. There are three characters : T-rex, Dromiceiomimus and Utahraptor. God, the devil and other assorted characters make occasional appearances, if you can call them that, from beyond the frame. So, you might ask, what makes this a great comic? One word : writing. I imagine its quite a challenge to make the script for each day fit into those unchanging visuals, and sometimes it shows. It takes a bit of time for a new reader to get well and truly hooked, speaking from my own experience. I might even say the visuals were intially an impediment. But boy, oh boy, the writing.

The comic is very intelligent, and that probably says a lot about its creator. My guess is that the comic serves as a vehicle to bring us the rambling thoughts of an intelligent and interesting mind, and that T-Rex is probably quite like Ryan, if not the same. Like I mentioned earlier, it might take a while for you to get hooked, but this is certainly a comic well worth persevering with. After all, it is often compared to David Lynch’s The Angriest Dog in the World comic, and was picked by Cracked.com as one of the 8 funniest comics on the webz.

We first met Sunando at the Delhi Comic Con early this year and were very excited when we saw the few sketches he showed us then. Sunando is currently illustrating a graphic novel for a major Indian Publisher and he’s posted some work-in-progress pages on his blog here.

This is a quiet, mostly monochromatic story. Those of us who expect an acrylic paint-splattered Arkham Asylumesque graphic novel might be taken by surprise by the austere black, white and pale blue that so simply and eloquently weave the tale of Cages. Most of this book is an effort of pure, unadulterated McKeaned drawing. McKeaned? You know the feeling of looking at people through a bit of thick, slightly blue glass? Be prepared for a few hundred pages of that – and be absolutely enchanted, and almost certainly lost and fuzzy.

And yet the mixed-media experience is there, leaping out at you from dramatically painted panels and spreads; surreal, almost cinematic stills; scribbledy-scrabbledy drawings on torn bits of sheet music; and riots of colour that lend their own meaning to the story. In the index pages, McKean’s nice enough to reveal the ingredients of his more intricate art – and deconstructionists like me can drool over details like “dried fish” and “doll’s house windows”.

What I enjoy the most about Cages is that it reads like a film. Panel after panel lovingly captures the gentle movement of a cat down a fire-escape; a worn woman looking into a mirror, turning her face slowly from side to side. McKean has captured so many nuances of expression it nearly makes a brave person weep.As a multi-talented artist, film-maker, jazz musician and writer, McKean draws common threads between painting, writing and music and mixes them all up into a unique, synesthetic narrative that makes sense of the strange (and not so strange) experiences of his key characters. A few characters and situations in the book can only have evolved in McKean’s particular imagination, and these lend a quiet touch of magical realism to the book.In all its 500 pages, Cages never ceases to amaze. Expressive artwork combined with an introspective, mysterious story that together packs a very visual, poetic punch somewhere in the small of your head.